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Success Has No Deadline

December 21, 2025

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In an age where success is measured by speed, visibility, and instant results, many young people grow up believing that if something does not happen early, it will never happen at all. Social media timelines and viral achievements reinforce the idea that life runs on a fixed schedule. But real life does not follow deadlines. Sometimes it moves only when it is ready—not when we are impatient.

Take Bobby Deol. There was a time when he was almost erased from the public imagination, especially among Gen X and Gen Y audiences. Many believed his career had ended. Yet at 55, his performance in Animal brought him massive national recognition and unexpectedly made him a Gen Z favorite. What looked like a full stop quietly turned into one of the strongest comebacks in recent Indian cinema.

Akshaye Khanna’s journey is equally powerful. For years, he was sidelined—no major films, little attention, and fading relevance in popular discourse. Then came 2025. At 50, his portrayal of Aurangzeb in Chhaava earned critical acclaim, while Dhurandhar transformed him into a cultural phenomenon. A simple dance moment to the song “Du Dus” went viral across India, Pakistan, and beyond. Today, he is more popular than ever, with renewed respect and promising opportunities ahead.

Closer home in Telugu cinema, Venkatesh achieved his first ₹100 crore film with Sankranthiki Vastunnam—a milestone that arrived after decades of steady work and patience. Interestingly, even his longtime contemporary Nagarjuna has not yet crossed this benchmark. This alone proves how unpredictable success truly is, and how timing often outweighs effort.

These are not just celebrity stories. They are reminders. Today, many young people feel lost when success does not arrive “on time.” Some slip into depression, some turn to substance abuse, and some take irreversible steps like suicide. The same pain exists among middle-aged individuals who lose businesses, fall into debt, or feel crushed by expectations from every direction.

The lesson here is not merely about working harder. It is about staying alive, staying present, and not taking extreme steps during temporary darkness. Sometimes, simply surviving is enough. Good days may come later than expected. Even if they arrive in a form different from what you imagined, allowing life to continue keeps the possibility of change alive.

Life does not end just because a chapter feels delayed. Some of the most meaningful moments arrive when we least expect them—long after we thought it was over.